Caught between the well-worn grooves the Boom and the Gen-X have
left on the Latin American literary canon, the writing
intellectuals that comprise what the Generation of '72 have not
enjoyed the same editorial acclaim or philological framing as the
literary cohorts that bookend them. In sociopolitical terms, they
neither fed into the Cold War-inflected literary prizes that
sustained the Boom nor the surge in cultural capital in Latin
American cities from which the writers associated with the Crack
and McOndo have tended to write. This book seeks to approach the
Generation of '72 from the perspective of cosmopolitanism and
global citizenship, a theoretical framework that lends a fresh and
critical architecture to the unique experiences and formal
responses of a group of intellectuals that wrote alongside
globalization's first wave.